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Warp Speed or variation, may refer to: Warp speed, a speed of warp drives, especially fictional ones from Star Trek; Warp Speed, film made in 1981 with Adam West; WarpSpeed, a 1992 videogame; Operation Warp Speed, a 2020 U.S. federal government program, public-private partnership, to quickly develop COVID-19/SARS-CoV-2 vaccines
Accordingly, "warp 1" is equivalent to the speed of light, "warp 2" is eight times the speed of light, "warp 3" is 27 times the speed of light, etc. Several episodes of The Original Series placed the Enterprise in peril by having it travel at high warp factors. However, the velocity (in present dimensional units) of any given warp factor is ...
Throughout the quadrant, there may be one or multiple space stations for the player to dock with, refuel and replenish their ship's systems, ammunition, and warp drive reserves. These stations are critical to the player and if they are lost, they can not be replaced. If the players craft suffers too much damage, the vessel will be destroyed.
However, this statement contradicts the technical manuals and encyclopedias written by Rick Sternbach and Michael Okuda, where a speed of 3053 times the speed of light was established for a warp factor of 9.9 and a speed of 7912 times the speed of light for a warp factor of 9.99. Both numerical values are well below the value given by Tom Paris ...
The five days since Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign launched at warp speed have remade the 2024 race – and given Democrats new hope of preventing a second Donald Trump presidency.
Operation Warp Speed, initially funded with about $10 billion from the CARES Act (Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security) passed by the United States Congress on March 27, 2020, [1] was an interagency program that includes components of the Department of Health and Human Services, including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ...
Economic growth is often seen as essential for economic prosperity, and indeed is one of the factors that is used as a measure of prosperity. The Rocky Mountain Institute, among others, has put forth an alternative point of view, that prosperity does not require growth, claiming instead that many of the problems facing communities are actually a result of growth, and that sustainable ...
As you wind your way through Elizabeth Husserl’s new book, “The Power of Enough: Finding Joy in Your Relationship with Money,” it’s hard to not hear Sheryl Crow’s song “Soak Up The Sun ...